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Friday, August 9, 2013

Top-seeded Gage Brymer has reverted to his Easter Bowl form, winning his quarterfinal and semifinal matches at the USTA Boys 18 and 16 National Championships from a set down. On an ideal day of tennis weather at Kalamazoo College's Stowe Stadium, Brymer overcame No. 5 seed Ernesto Escobedo 4-6, 6-4, 6-2.

In claiming the Easter Bowl ITF title in April, Brymer won four of his matches, including the final, from a set down. Until yesterday's 1-6, 6-4, 7-6(5) win over fellow UCLA Bruin freshman Mackenzie McDonald, Brymer had won his early rounds in straight sets, but he credited the level his competition for his perilous situation the past two days.

"Maybe I came out a little slow, but I thought Mackie came out really aggressive yesterday, and today Ernesto did the same thing," said Brymer, 18. "It was really tough to break either of them. With Ernesto, in the first two sets, he's got a good serve and played aggressive, so it was really tough."

After the 10-minute break between the second and third sets, Brymer didn't change his strategy, only his energy level, but that was enough to build a 4-0 lead.

"In the first two sets, I was playing all right, but I just didn't have as much energy as I needed to," Brymer said. "In the first couple of games of the third set, that was my main focus, come out with a lot of energy, keep balls in play, look for my opportunities and take them when they were there."

Escobedo's serve wasn't giving him as many forehand putaways as usual in the third set, but he was able to hold serve twice before Brymer served for the match. After his backhand winner made it 40-15, Brymer said "one more", and his big forehand forced an error from Escobedo, putting Brymer in the semifinals.

Brymer said his training has given him the stamina to recover quickly from difficult matches, like the one he had against McDonald.

"I'm used to training really hard," said Brymer. "I take pride in my work ethic and I feel like over the summer, leading up to this tournament, I've really prepared myself by doing the extra work and the extra hours. That's really helped me so that the longer matches don't affect me as much as the other players."

Brymer's semifinal opponent is unseeded Collin Altamirano, who also credits his fitness regimen as a key in his success this week.

"I'm wearing guys down over time," said Altamirano, who defeated unseeded Trevor Johnson 7-5, 6-0. "I work out probably about three hours a day on top of hitting. I do it all, anywhere from swimming, to running, to weights, everything."

Altamirano, who, like Brymer, has come back from a set down twice in the tournament, wasn't surprised by the second set score in his match with Johnson.

"The first set was tight, he served very well, he was hitting good shots, but I just kept wearing him down," said Altamirano, 17. "The next thing you know, he kept making more errors and more errors, and in the second, I snuck a break in there early and he was just done after that."

Because Altamirano played only Futures events except for the Spring Nationals at Mobile this year, he wasn't expecting to be seeded, but he didn't feel that was an impediment to his chances to win the tournament.

"I don't play as much as the other kids when it comes to juniors," said Altamirano, who lives and trains in Sacramento, California. "I was expecting not to be seeded. But it's good. I'm doing what I came here for."

Another player who competes very little on the junior circuit is No. 14 seed Jared Donaldson, who reached the semifinals with a 7-6(5), 6-3 victory over No. 6 Luca Corinteli. But Donaldson wasn't sure, back in February, if he was interesting in playing any tennis at all, quitting the game for three months this spring.

"I think it was a combination of a lot of things," said Donaldson, 16, who left Argentina, where he'd been training for three years, in February, returning to his home in Rhode Island.

"I was a little burnt out culturally, not speaking the language that well, and I think I was burned out mentally," said Donaldson, who received a wild card into the tournament. "If you asked me in March if I was going to be in the semifinals of this tournament, or even playing this tournament, I would be very skeptical. I just feel lucky to be here."

Donaldson sought help from a sports psychologist, and decided that the daily achievement that tennis represented for him was something he wanted back in his life.

"When I started playing tournaments again in June, some Futures, and I had good results there, good matches, got some points, and played the qualifying of (an ATP) 250, so I'd won matches and was feeling confident coming in here, but I still hadn't had that one breakthrough in the Futures or even in the juniors really. But I knew I was playing well and felt confident about my game, felt confident it was coming, it was coming."

Donaldson hadn't exactly rolled through the draw, needing a third set tiebreaker to beat AJ Catanzariti in the second round, and trailing No. 4 seed Connor Farren 7-5, 5-2 in yesterday's round of 16 match. But he played well from then throughout the rest of the match, so falling behind Corinteli, who had two set points in the first set with Donaldson serving at 5-6, didn't faze him.

"The tiebreaker was really close, 4-3, 4-4, 5-4, 5-5, 6-5 me," said Donaldson. "And I just got that one second serve at 5-6, and I hit a good return at his feet, because he came in behind it, and I won the point and the first set. That kind of relaxed me, because I didn't feel I was playing that well up until that point, but I felt more confident in the second set."

Donaldson will play No. 2 seed Noah Rubin, who ended the run of unseeded Logan Staggs 6-2, 6-0. Donaldson and Rubin have never met, but it's a match Donaldson has always wanted to play.

"Ever since we were 11, I knew the name Noah Rubin," said Donaldson. "He was always better than me, so it's going to be fun to play a guy my year, to test myself against probably the best kid in United States tennis right now."

The top four seeds have advanced to the semifinals of the 16s, with only one of the quarterfinal matches extending to three sets.

In that match, No. 3 seed Tommy Paul served for the match at 5-4 in the second set, but lost the subsequent tiebreaker before posting a 6-4, 6-7(3), 6-2 victory over No. 9 seed Reilly Opelka.

Paul will play No. 2 seed Francis Tiafoe, who once again failed to serve out the match when he had the chance, but came back for a straight set victory over No. 24 seed Zeke Clark 6-3, 7-6(4).

"It's a little losing focus, it's not nerves," said Tiafoe, who served for the match at 5-4 against the speedy Clark. "I think I have it and I'm relaxed, but I've got to play a little tighter. It's the biggest tournament in the US and everybody's going to be playing unbelievable on those points especially, so I've got to tighten up."

Tiafoe respects the results Paul has gotten in the past few months, although Tiafoe did beat Paul 6-3, 6-3 in the Carson ITF Grade 1 in April.

"He's definitely got a lot of confidence behind him," said Tiafoe. "He's just won Clays and ITFs in the spring, so it should be an exciting match tomorrow."

"I knew it was going to be a tough match and it was a tough match," said Kumar, 16. "The score doesn't completely look like that but it was tough, so I'm glad to get through this."

Kumar admitted that the US Open junior wild card was a major factor in his decision to play the 16s division this week.

"Since I don't play very many ITFs, this is probably the only way to get to the US Open," said the Carmel, Indiana resident. "Obviously, I really, really want that. That would be a very cool experience, so I really hope I can win two more matches."

DeVine earned his way into the semifinals with a 6-4, 6-3 win over No. 7 seed Kalman Boyd.

DeVine took the first set with a break at 4-5, then took a 3-0 lead, only to see Boyd come back to make it 3-3.

"In the second set, I started strong, but I kind of lost my rhythm a little bit," said the 16-year-old, who trains with the USTA. "He got it back to 3-all and I held serve at 4-3. I played a fantastic last two games to finish the match, which I was really happy with."

DeVine, who won the ITF 16s title in Carson this year, lost to eventual champion Kumar in the quarterfinals of the Easter Bowl 7-5, 6-4, is determined to leave the tournament without experiencing two losses.

"I was in the semis at Clay Courts, and I lost two matches, to Reilly Opelka and Alex Rybakov, and it's a bitter feeling to leave the tournament with two losses after having such a good run, so this tournament I'm definitely looking to go all the way."

The 16s singles semifinals begin at 9:30 a.m., followed by the 18s semifinals.

The 18s doubles semifinals were much closer, with both going three sets.

No. 3 seeds Paul Oosterbaan and Ronnie Schneider took advantage of significant crowd support to come back against 2012 16s champions Henrik Wiersholm and Danield Kerznerman, seeded eighth, 2-6, 7-5, 6-2. They will play No. 4 seeds Henry Craig and George Goldhoff, who also turned their match around, defeating unseeded William Griffith and JT Nishimura 3-6, 6-2, 6-4. A main draw wild card into the US Open men's doubles draw is on the line in Saturday's final.

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comments:

Also, how about McDonald's change of luck. He gets two extremely difficult draws (at least for a top 10 seed) in both parts of Kalamazoo. But, as a result of his availability, he has ended up with a WC into the Qualifying in Cincy. Good luck today!

I told all you naysayers that an unseeded player was destined to win this year, especially since the strength of the overall field is at an all time low. Let's see, an unseeded player playing the #14 seed for a spot into the US Open. Now that is a joke!

And also what is wrong with this picture... McDonald getting a wild card into Cincy??? Based on how many deserving players there are, this decision really baffles me.

Still not happy with the 18s seeding committee at Kalamazoo with Ronnie Schnieder and Mackie McDonald. I thought the committee did a real disservice to the tournament. Both Ronnie and Mackie have been nationally ranked #1 in the 18s and they had to play the #1 and #2 seeds in the round of 16. The quarter final matchups was a yawn-fest with only one decent matchup. I just read that Mackie just had a Top 100 professional win today which further shows you the seeding flaw in Mackie.

The 18s tournament has shown is that the usta players are no where and the USTA Leadership should stop spending money only on a few players.

USTA PD should not coach juniors privately. They should only coach pro players privately.

Tommy Paul was declined by the USTA in Boca for the past 3 years until only couple months ago when he started winning some tournaments, now he is there full time and as expected the USTA are taking full credit for him.

People are complaining about seeding, yet none of the guys ANYONE said would do well have made the finals, but the top two seeds did make the semi's, including Brymer who people complained was a joke as the #1 seed. The way I see it the committee did as good as anyone else's predictions.

Rubin probably withdrew so he wouldn't take another loss on his stellar recent performance. Maybe the Nats will get smart and finally do away with the back draw. It's meaningless anyway, but I do applaud the players that lose in the main draw and still have the integrity to compete among the other losers.

Could not disagree with eliminating the backdraw at he zoo. Its a showcase for us juniors and college coaches. Gives coaches a great opportunity to see how many of juniors below the top tier compete. Besides except for the top seeds a lot of players would only get one or two matches. Even for the top players personally believe it shows a lot of grit to grind it through the backdraw and a lack of it to pull out.

I agree with get real. If you are playing college tennis at the NCAA's, and you lose your match one day, but your team happens to win, you better be mentally prepared to go out the next day and really fight again. This "withdrawing" in the backdraw just lacks integrity and professionalism. Parents who let their kids withdraw without any valid reason should do 50 pushups.

Tennis aside, in real work life, you have to get over the disappointments of one day, suck it up, and move forward professionally the next day. The corporation doesn't take "pouting" very well, needless to say.